Cool Roofing Technologies Hashem Akbari Heat Island Group Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory Tel: 510-486-4287 E_mail: H_Akbari@LBL.gov.

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Cool Roofing Technologies

Hashem AkbariHeat Island Group

Ernest Orlando Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory

Tel: 510-486-4287E_mail: H_Akbari@LBL.govhttp://HeatIsland.LBL.gov

STEAB Visit to LBNLAugust 14, 2007

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Orthophoto of Sacramento

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Under the Canopy Fabric of Sacramento, CA

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Downtown Industrial Industrial Office Com. Com. Res.

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GrassRoofsPavementsOthers

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Cooling roofs by increasing solar reflectance

• A conventional dark roof absorbs most sunlight• Increasing solar reflectance

reduces solar heat gain lowers roof temperature

• High thermal emittance facilitates radiative cooling helps keep roof temperature low

• Lowering roof temperature can reduce building cooling electricity use peak power demand ambient air temperature

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Environmental impacts of cooling roofs

• Benefits increased human comfort slowed smog formation mitigation of urban heat islands in summer decreased waste from disposal of roofs

• Penalties slightly higher wintertime heating energy use degraded wintertime urban air quality

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Direct and Indirect Effects of Light-Colored Surfaces

•Direct Effect- Light-colored roofs reflect solar radiation, reduce air-

conditioning use

•Indirect Effect- Light-colored surfaces in a neighborhood alter surface

energy balance; result in lower ambient temperature

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Methodology: Energy and Air-Quality Analysis

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White Roofs:Measured Cooling Savings

• Sacramento: 80% in a house; 35% in two school bungalows

• Florida: 10%-43% in several houses, average 19%

• California and Florida: 5%–20% in several commercial buildings

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Potential National Savings from Changing Roof Reflectivity

Peak Demand Savings in All U.S.

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“Cool” products for low-sloped roofs

• Many materials available coating (white) single-ply membrane (white) painted metal (white, cool colored)

• Products are rated by theCool Roof Rating Council (CRRC) labels solar reflectance, thermal emittance website: www.coolroofs.org

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Cool Roofing Materials Availability High-Sloped Roofs

• Limited but expanding material availability Tile (several maufacturers) Coatings (one manufacturer) Metal (many manufacturers) Shake (only for custom application) Shingles (one manufacturer)

• Over 70% of high-sloped roofs use hot asphalt shingles

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ISP/LBNL Shingle With Whiter Roofing Granules

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White is ‘cool’ in Bermuda

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and in Santorini, Greece

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Cool Roof Technologies

flat, white

pitched, white

pitched, cool & colored

Old New

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Cool Colors Reflect Invisible Near-Infrared Sunlight

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Cool and Standard BrownMetal Roofing Panels

• Solar reflectance ~ 0.2 higher

• Afternoon surface temperature ~ 10ºC lower

CourtesyBASF

Coatings

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Example: Dioxazine PurpleOver Various Undercoats

• Two-layer system top coat: thin layer of dioxazine purple (14-27 µm) undercoat or substrate:

aluminum foil (~ 25 µm) opaque white paint (~1000 µm)non-opaque white paint (~ 25 µm)opaque black paint (~ 25 µm)

purpleover

aluminumfoil

purpleover

opaquewhite paint

purpleover

non-opaquewhite paint

purpleover

opaqueblack paint

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Dioxazine Purple Reflectances

over aluminumRsolar = 0.41

over opaque whiteRsolar = 0.42

over non-opaque whiteRsolar = 0.30

over opaque blackRsolar = 0.05

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National Labs andIndustrial Partnership• Program is sponsored by

CEC/PIER

• ORNL and LBNL are teaming with industry

• Broad industrial partnership

• Industry partners 3M (ganules) American Roof Tile Coating BASF (metal) Custom-Bilt Metals Elk Manufacturing (shingles) Ferro GAF (shingles) Hanson Roof Tile ISP Minerals (ganules) MCA (tiles) Monier Lifetile (tile) Shepherd Color Company

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Cool and Standard Color-Matched Concrete Tiles

• Can increase solar reflectance by up to 0.5

• Gain greatest for dark colors

cool

standard

∆R=0.37 ∆R=0.29∆R=0.15∆R=0.23∆R=0.26 ∆R=0.29

CourtesyAmericanRooftile

Coatings

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Increasing solar reflectance of fiberglass asphalt shingles: prototypes

cooler: ρ=0.28

ρ = solar reflectance

ρ=0.36

warmer: ρ=0.23 ρ=0.27 ρ=0.28

ρ=0.37

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Increasing solar reflectance of fiberglass asphalt shingles:Elk Prestique® Cool Color Series

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Increasing solar reflectance of metal roofing:BASF Ultra-Cool® metal roof coatings

numbers denote solar reflectances: cooler (warmer)

CourtesyBASF

Industrial Coatings

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Cool Metal Roofs

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Increasing solar reflectance of clay tiles:MCA Clay Tile cool colored tiles

Model Color Initial solar reflectance

Solar reflectance after 3 years

Weathered Green Blend

0.43 0.49

Natural Red

0.43 0.38

Brick Red

0.42 0.40

White Buff

0.68 0.56

Tobacco

0.43 0.41

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Non-residential building energy and equipment savings:15-year net present value of savings ($/1000 ft2)

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30-year net present value of savings ($/1000 ft2): concrete tile roofs

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California Climate Zone

Equip 39 53 37 56 42 58 39 71 74 60 64 55 68 66 66 60

Energy 406 917 726 992 781 1,593 1,432 1,822 1,862 1,390 1,190 1,109 1,355 1,477 1,900 791

$0.10/ft2 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100

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30-year net present value of savings ($/1000 ft2): metal roofs

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California Climate Zone

Equip 41 57 41 61 47 57 48 83 88 65 71 60 73 72 71 65

Energy 495 1,053 847 1,128 919 1,870 1,692 2,141 2,181 1,561 1,330 1,243 1,507 1,648 2,093 918

$0.10/ft2 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100 100

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Cool Roofs Standards• Building standards for reflective roofs

- American Society of Heating and Air-conditioning Engineers (ASHRAE): New commercial and residential buildings

- Many state: California, Georgia, Florida, Hawaii, …

• Air quality standards

- South Coast AQMD

- S.F. Bay Area AQMD

- EPA’s SIP (State Implementation Plans)

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White Roofs Programs in California

• One Time CEC Incentive -- $20 Million at $0.15 to $0.20 per square foot

• California utilities incentives

• 2001 to 2005-- credits white and cool colored roofs

• 2005 requires cool flat roofs

• 2008 may require cool roofs for all buildings

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Cool Roof Programs around the World

• U.S.

• Europe

• Asia

• Middle East

• China

• India (Hyderabad demos; see graphs; funded by U.S.AID)

Cool Roofs to Save CO2

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Cool Surfaces also Cool the Globe

• Cool roof standards are designed to reduce a/c demand, save money, and save emissions. In Los Angeles they will eventually save ~$100,000 per hour

• Annual savings in the U.S. = $1-2B; ~ 7 M tons CO2

• Annual savings in the world = $10-15B; ~ 100 M tons CO2

• But higher albedo surfaces (roofs and pavements) directly

cool the world (0.01 K) quite independent of avoided CO2.

So we discuss the effect of cool surfaces for tropical, temperate cities

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100 Largest Cities have 670 M People

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Population (M)

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Mean = 560 m2/p

Med = 430 m2/p

Tokyo

Mexico CityNew York CityMumbaiSão Paulo

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Dense Urban Areas are 1% of Land

• Area of the Earth = 511x1012 m2

• Land Area (29%) = 148x1012 m2 [1]

• Area of the 100 largest cities = 0.38x1012 m2 = 0.26% of Land Area for 670 M people

• Assuming 3B live in urban area, urban areas = [3000/670] x 0.26% = 1.2% of land

• But smaller cities have lower population density, hence, urban areas = 2% of land

• Dense, developed urban areas only 1% of land [2]

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Potentials to Increase Urban Albdeo is 0.1

• Typical urban area is 25% roof and 35% paved surfaces

• Roof albedo can increase by 0.25 for a net change of 0.25x0.25=0.063

• Paved surfaces albedo can increase by 0.15 for a net change of 0.35x0.15=0.052

• Net urban area albedo change at least 0.10

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Effect of Increasing Urban Albedo by 0.1

• Net Change in Global albedo= [City/Land]x[Land/Globe]xΔa = [2]x[1]xΔa = 0.01 x 0.29 x0.1 = 0.0003 [3]

• The effect on global temperature Using three different calculations is about 0.01K

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Carbon Equivalency• Modelers estimate a warming of 2K in 60 years, so

0.03K/year

• Change of 0.1 in urban albedo will result in 0.01K, a delay of ~0.3 years in global warming

• World’s current rate of CO2 emissions =

25 G tons/year (4.1 tons/year per person)

• World’s rate of CO2 emissions averaged over next 60

years = 40 G tons/year

• Hence 0.3 years delay is worth 12 Gt CO2; ~ 200 Mt

CO2/year

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Equivalent Value of Avoided CO2

• CO2 currently trade at ~$10/ton

• 12Gt worth $120 billion, for changing albedo of roofs and paved surface

• Cooler roofs alone worth $60B

• Cooler roofs also save air conditioning (and provide comfort) worth over $6,00B - $900B over 60 years; 100 Mt CO2/year

• We would like to start an international organization where the developed countries offer $1 million per large city in a developing country, to trigger a cool roof/pavement program in that city

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Market Deployment of Cool Color Cars

• Toyota experiment (surface temperature 10 °C cooler with cool coatings.)

• Ford is also working on a similar technology.

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Effect of A/C on fuel consumptionUS Cal.

No. of Vehicles (106) 213 26Miles/year/car (103) 12 12Fuel Eff [mpg] 20 20Annual fuel use [109gal] 130 15Annual fuel expense at 2.5 $/gal [$B] 230 38Reduced efficiency due to A/C 15% 15%% time AC runs 50% 50%A/C contribution to fuel use [109gal] 9.6 1.2A/C contribution to fuel expense [$B] 24 3

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Benefits of 2.8K (5°F) reductionin soak temperature

US Cal.Reduction in AC capacity 11% 11%Improvement in mpg 1.8% 1.8%Reduced NOx emission 4.5% 4.5%Reduced fuel expense ($M) 2876 346Reduced CO emission (tonne/day) 978 117.8Reduced NOx emission (tonne/day) 103 12.4Reduced NMHC emission (tonne/day) 18 2.2

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Practical Guidelines

• EPA Guidebook (1992)• Good practical information• Greatest focus on trees

• EPA is working on a new edition

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